| Cory Salveson on Tue, 12 Jan 2016 23:40:44 +0100 (CET) |
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| Re: <nettime> aaaaarg lawsuit digest |
Kudos to you, Doug, for speaking up. This has always been my own
concern with aaaaaarg, even as I've taken a lot of joy in seeing it
evolve over the years.
Aaaaaarg is a brilliant vision of a possible and very desirable future
for knowledge production, in many other ways than the one you
highlight. By "unbundling" the academic library from academic
institutions, it solves or improves upon so many challenges of
traditional academic research labor: easy access to (hypothetically)
everything, even and especially the obscure (not least because users
upload scans of things not yet otherwise digitized or in print); full
text search with unrestricted copy-pasting; strong combination of site
features and community practice around curation of collections; a
self-critical community... But it happens at the expense of individual
laborers like yourself, without their/your consent and without
compensation to those individuals/you. So, I for one think aaaaaarg is
doing something important, but I've always assumed it's more a proof of
concept for something that will come after than a pirate utopia to be
defended and protected as such. It's a glimmering dream we don't quite
deserve yet if we're not willing to pay for it in something besides
aspirational coding, scanning, and tagging. Arguments about the justice
of e.g. Elsevier getting paid for academic books, or the justness of
capitalism itself, are important to debate but are beside the point if
that debate relies on the further belittling of individual authors. The
issue is more, then, that where internet fantasies of totally free
music, movie, and software sharing all now have viable, legitimate
alternatives (digital libraries and markets as well as digital media
accessible for free through libraries, such as through OverDrive and
Freegal in the United States), there is no such thing as a
mass-market-priced alternative for academic books and content. Scribd's
confusing, gray-area mutations over the years are not quite up to
snuff.
On Tue, Jan 12, 2016 at 1:29 PM Doug Henwood <[1]dhenwood@panix.com>
wrote:
> On Jan 12, 2016, at 9:41 AM, [2]sebastian@rolux.org wrote:
>
> You're probably worrying too much about the
> big corporations that actually own IP, and almost certainly not
> enough about the small authors that hallucinate IP.
I've got a new little book about Hillary Clinton and it's already up on
aaaaarg, or however many fucking a's it requires. I'm a writer and I
hope to get paid for my work. It's how I pay my bills. "Small authors"
aren't exactly thriving and this isn't helping. So fuck this piratic
sense of entitlement.
Doug Henwood
author of My Turn: Hillary Clinton Targets the Presidency
[3]http://www.orbooks.com/catalog/my-turn-by-doug-henwood/
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